Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dorina C. Sevilla is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dorina C. Sevilla.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Evaluation of changes in standard electrocardiographic QRS waveforms recorded from activity-compatible proximal limb lead positions

Olle Pahlm; Lars Edenbrandt; Nancy B. Wagner; Dorina C. Sevilla; Ronald H. Selvester; Galen S. Wagner

Proximal limb lead positions are currently used for activity-compatible electrocardiographic monitoring of myocardial ischemia. Two previously described systems for alternate limb lead placement were studied in patients with and without QRS evidence of healed anterior or inferior myocardial infarction. An innovative method was used to simultaneously record 6 standard and 6 modified limb leads, and 3 standard and 3 modified precordial leads on a standard digital electrocardiograph. Both alternate lead placement systems showed rightward frontal plane axis shift and diminished Q-wave durations in lead aVF compared with those of their simultaneous standard controls. Furthermore, potential differences between the standard distal limb lead sites and 5 more proximal sites were explored along each limb. Differences along the left arm were accentuated relative to those along the right arm owing to differences in proximity of the arms to the myocardium. Along the lower limb, and anterior site showed less deviation from standard than did a more lateral site. It is imperative that recordings from alternate sites be labeled accordingly so that their output cannot be confused with that obtained from standard sites.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Anatomic validation of electrocardiographic estimation of the size of acute or healed myocardial infarcts.

Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; Richard D. White; Steven L. Peck; Raymond E. Ideker; Donald B. Hackel; Keith A. Reimer; Ronald H. Selvester; Galen S. Wagner

Seventeen new criteria added to the simplified version of the Selvester QRS scoring system to comprise the complete version were evaluated to determine their value in estimating the size of single infarcts. These non-Q-wave criteria might be particularly useful regarding posterolateral infarcts in the distribution of the left circumflex artery. The study population was made up of 21 anterior, 30 inferior and 20 posterolateral single myocardial infarction (MI) patients with no evidences of bundle branch or fascicular blocks, ventricular hypertrophy or previous MI on their final stable electrocardiogram. The complete systems maximum 32 points is capable of indicating MI in 96% of the left ventricle and it estimated a mean electrocardiographic MI size that better approximated the anatomic size compared with the simplified version in all MI locations. The correlation between anatomic and electrocardiographic MI size using the complete system was better and statistically significant for the posterolateral MI group (simplified r = 0.55, p less than 0.01 vs complete r = 0.70, p less than 0.0006). Criteria such as Q and S amplitude less than or equal to 0.3 mV in V1 and less than or equal to 0.4 mV in V2 were particularly helpful. This study documents the improved ability provided by the 17 additional non-Q-wave criteria which have been added in the complete version of this scoring system regarding the sizing of infarcts in the region of the left ventricle supplied by the left circumflex artery.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Importance of early and complete reperfusion to achieve myocardial salvage after thrombolysis in acute myocardial infarction

Peter Clemmensen; E. Magnus Ohman; Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; Peter S. Quigley; Peer Grande; Galen S. Wagner

The importance of the timing and completeness of coronary artery reperfusion for limitation of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) size after intravenous thrombolytic therapy was studied in 39 patients. All had electrocardiographic epicardial injury and acute coronary angiography performed < 8 hours after symptom onset. Acutely jeopardized myocardium was estimated at baseline, and before and after angiography by quantitative ST-segment analysis. The AMI size was estimated on the final electrocardiogram by the Selvester QRS score. Left ventricular ejection fraction was measured at the time of acute angiography and before discharge in 31 of these patients. In the 21 patients with normal flow (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction [TIMI] trial grade 3) in the infarct-related artery, the amount of jeopardized myocardium decreased from baseline to that before and after angiography (17 to 11 and 11%, respectively; p < 0.00005), and the median final AMI size was reduced (17 to 9%; p = 0.0004). In 6 patients with suboptimal flow (TIMI grade 2), the median amount of jeopardized myocardium decreased slightly from baseline to that before to after angiography (15 to 12%); however, the median final AMI size was not reduced (17%). In 12 patients with no reperfusion (TIMI 0 to 1) flow, the median amount of jeopardized myocardium remained unchanged from baseline to that before angiography (21%), and the final AMI size was not significantly reduced. There was a significant inverse correlation between the change in global left ventricular function and the difference between electrocardiographic estimated jeopardized and final AMI size (rs = -0.53; p = 0.008).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Heart Journal | 1991

Indices of reperfusion in patients with acute myocardial infarction using characteristics of the CK-MB time-activity curve

Peer Grande; Jørgen Granborg; Peter Clemmensen; Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; Galen S. Wagner

The purpose of this study was to identify indices of coronary artery reperfusion in patients treated with thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) by means of characteristics from the serum creatine kinase (CK) isoenzyme MB time-activity curve. Frequent blood sampling as performed in three groups with a first AMI: 29 patients treated with intravenous thrombolytic therapy who had a patent infarct-related artery with normal flow (TIMI-3) at acute catheterization (reperfusion group); four patients with a persistently closed infarct-related artery (no reperfusion group); and 44 patients who did not receive any therapy aimed at coronary reperfusion (no thrombolytic therapy group). In the latter group we prospectively estimated that 25% would have spontaneous reperfusion. A physiologically based computer-calculated multi-compartment method was used to determine the characteristics of the serum CK-MB time-activity curve. In addition to demonstrating an earlier increase, a shorter time to peak of serum CK-MB and a lower estimated infarct size in the reperfusion group (p = 0.025 to 0.00001), the appearance rate constant (k1) and time from estimated initial increase to peak of CK-MB in the blood stream (tRP) were significantly different from those values in the no thrombolytic therapy group (p less than 00001). A cutoff level indicating reperfusion if k1 was greater than 0.185 or tRP was less than 16.5 hours demonstrated overlapping values between these two groups in only four patients (k1), two patients (tRP), and six patients with a combination.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Sensitivity of a set of myocardial infarction screening criteria in patients with anatomically documented single and multiple infarcts

Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; William D. Anderson; Raymond E. Ideker; Keith A. Reimer; Eileen M. Mikat; Donald B. Hackel; Ronald H. Selvester; Galen S. Wagner

A subset of 3 screening criteria (Q wave greater than or equal to 30 ms in lead aVF, any Q or R wave less than or equal to 10 ms and less than or equal to 0.1 mV in lead V2, and R wave greater than or equal to 40 ms in V1) has been proposed to identify single nonacute myocardial infarcts. Cumulatively, these 3 criteria achieved 95% specificity, and 84 and 77% sensitivities for inferior and anterior myocardial infarcts, respectively, among patients identified by coronary angiography and left ventriculography. This study establishes the true sensitivities of the set of screening criteria in 71 patients with anatomically proven single myocardial infarcts and 32 patients with multiple myocardial infarcts. In the single inferior infarct group, the aVF criterion was 90% sensitive. The V2 criterion (any Q or R wave less than or equal to 10 ms and less than or equal to 0.1 mV) was 67% sensitive in the single anterior infarct group. No single criterion proved sensitive in identifying a posterolateral infarct. The set of screening criteria performed just as well for multiple infarcts as it did for single infarcts, with a cumulative sensitivity of 72%. The overall sensitivity of the screening set in the 103 patients in all groups was 71%.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Ratio of ST-Segment and myoglobin slopes to estimate myocardial salvage during thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction

Julie M. Baskin; Michelle L. Wilkins; E. Magnus Ohman; Peter Clemmensen; Peer Grande; Robert H. Christenson; Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; Galen S. Wagner

Abstract The use of intravenous thrombolytic therapy to achieve myocardial salvage has become common practice in patients presenting during the early hours of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). 1–3 A prompt, noninvasive estimation of salvage would be useful in determining further therapy for each patient. Clinical indexes of salvage should be accurate, easy to perform, inexpensive, and yield rapid results. Standard electrocardiographic and serum biochemical methods have been shown to indicate myocardial reperfusion. 4–9 Electrocardiographic ST-segment elevation tends to partially resolve immediately after reperfusion, but only 50% of patients have as much as 50% resolution within 90 minutes. 4 Plasma levels of intracellular macromolecules increase early owing to washout through the lymph and blood, but only if irreversible damage has already occurred. 5–9 The present study of patients with AMI was designed to observe serial changes in both the ST segments, and serum levels of creatine kinase-MB and myoglobin after angiographically documented reperfusion; it tests the hypothesis that the ratio of ST-segment decrease to serum macromolecular increase can predict salvage of the jeopardized myocardium.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Transient electrocardiographic changes of elective coronary angioplasty compared with evolutionary changes of subsequent acute myocardial infarction observed with continuous three-lead monitoring

Nancy B. Wagner; W.Jeffrey Elias; Mitchell W. Krucoff; Dorina C. Sevilla; Yvette R. Jackson; Kenneth K. Kent; Galen S. Wagner

Abstract The current use of continuous multilead monitoring with high-resolution digital systems 1 during clinically unstable situations has greatly augmented the versatility of the electrocardiogram. A recent study 2 of patients undergoing elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) reported multilead patterns of peak ST-segment elevation and depression that were reproduced by later reocclusion of the same coronary site. In related work, 3,4 detailed quantitative analyses of dynamic changes in the QRS complex and ST segment during PTCA-induced ischemia were presented in the most active lead of each patient. Occasionally an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) develops spontaneously in the hours after an elective PTCA. Use of continuous electrocardiographic monitoring would facilitate comparisons between the dynamic changes of the “controlled” ischemic period during the PTCA and the spontaneous ischemic period of the AMI by using each patient as his own baseline. Such information may provide a more complete understanding of the evolution of the acute ischemic process. Using continuous 3-lead monitoring in 4 carefully selected patients with elective PTCA who subsequently developed AMI, this study quantitates and compares dynamic characteristics of the ST segment occurring during both ischemic events.


Journal of Electrocardiology | 1992

Use of the 12-lead ECG to detect myocardial reperfusion and salvage during acute myocardial infarction

Dorina C. Sevilla; Nancy B. Wagner; Karen S. Pieper; Peter Clemmensen; Tomoaki Hinohara; Peer Grande; Galen S. Wagner

In this era of thrombolytic therapy, the standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) is easily available and noninvasive and could provide indicators of myocardial reperfusion and salvage. Previous reports have proposed that a decrease of total ST-segment elevation of > or = 20% from the pre- to the immediate posttreatment ECG is indicative of reperfusion, and that a > or = 20% decrease from the initial infarct size predicted by ST-segment deviation on the admission ECG to the final infarct size estimated by QRS score on the predischarge recording is indicative of myocardial salvage. This prospective study of 29 patients with myocardial infarction and angiographically documented reperfusion shows that the > or = 20% threshold for ST resolution achieved 79% sensitivity and 70% specificity in patients receiving intravenous therapy and 90% sensitivity in those receiving rescue intracoronary therapy. However, it should be noted that 21% of patients with successful intravenous therapy failed to achieve even this threshold of ST resolution. Regarding myocardial salvage, 63% of patients receiving intravenous and 90% of those receiving rescue intracoronary therapy achieved the threshold of > or = 20% decrease in infarct size.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Changes in standard electrocardiographic ST-segment elevation predictive of successful reperfusion in acute myocardial infarction

Peter Clemmensen; E. Magnus Ohman; Dorina C. Sevilla; Steve Peck; Nancy B. Wagner; Peter S. Quigley; Peer Grande; Kerry L. Lee; Galen S. Wagner


American Journal of Cardiology | 1988

Transient alterations of the QRS complex and ST segment during percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty of the left anterior descending coronary artery

Nancy B. Wagner; Dorina C. Sevilla; Mitchell W. Krucoff; Kerry L. Lee; Karen S. Pieper; Kenneth K. Kent; Randy K. Bottner; Ronald H. Selvester; Galen S. Wagner

Collaboration


Dive into the Dorina C. Sevilla's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ronald H. Selvester

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peer Grande

Copenhagen University Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge